Return Of The Dragon
20th Century Fox (1973)
Action, Comedy
In Collection
#1369
6*
Seen ItYes
(6/13/2011)
024543018049
IMDB   6.8
90 mins USA/English
DVD  Region 1   R
Bruce Lee Tang Lung
Chung-Hsin Huang 'Uncle' Wang
Robert Wall Fred
Ing-Sik Whang Japanese Fighter
Robert Baker Thug/Extra
Jon T. Benn Boss
Ricardo Billie Extra
Russell Cawthorne Bank President
Unicorn Chan Jimmy
Fu Ching Chen Waiter
Robert Chen Robert
Nora Miao Chen Ching Hua
Chuck Norris Colt
Ping-Ao Wei Ho
Tony Liu Tony
Malisa Longo Italian Beauty
Di Chin Ah Quen
Wu Ngan Waiter
Director Bruce Lee
Producer Raymond Chow
Bruce Lee
Andre Morgan
Writer Bruce Lee
Cinematography Ho Lang Shang
Musician Joseph Koo

Bruce Lee wrote and directed Return of the Dragon, his third film, a mix of hard-edged kung fu and goofy humor. Once again he plays the country boy who travels to a foreign land, in this case Italy, where his restaurant-owning cousins face trouble from the local syndicate. Their strong-arm tactics have driven customers away and now threaten the family, but Lee refuses to buckle under their pressure and takes them on in a series of impressive confrontations. The film ends with a memorable showdown with world-champion karate artist Chuck Norris in the Roman Colosseum (though much of it is staged in a rather cheap studio set), a brutal, almost inhuman battle that revels in the intense punishment taken by the combatants. Norris is one of Lee's best opponents and a marvelous physical contrast: brawny and hairy, using power and blunt karate moves while lean, wiry Lee counters with speed, gymnastic prowess, and balletic grace. The mix of comedy and kung fu comes off as camp at times, but that's hardly the reason to see the film. When Lee gets into action, whether he's taking on a gang of knife-wielding thugs or dueling Norris to the death, he becomes the total focus. Originally titled The Way of the Dragon, this film was renamed in the wake of Enter the Dragon to cash in on that movie's popularity. --Sean Axmaker
Edition Details
Series Bruce Lee
Distributor 20th Century Fox
Chapters 14
Release Date 8/9/1999
Packaging Keep Case
Screen Ratio 2.35:1
Subtitles English
Audio Tracks ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Mono [CC]
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
No. of Disks/Tapes 1
Personal Details
Purchase Date 7/3/2001
Owner Thomas Eisenmann
Store WalMart
Condition Excellent
Reviewed Widescreen Review
Bit Rate 192 KB
Anamophic No
Links IMDB
Amazon US
The Way Of The Dragon at Movie Collector Connect

Features
A fifth disc is included in this set that contains the 88-minute documentary “Bruce Lee The Legend.” There are no extra features on the four movie discs.

Widescreen Review
Story Synopsis:
Return Of The Dragon features a globetrotting Lee as Tang Lung who is visiting relatives in Italy. Owners of a restaurant, his family is being bullied by gangsters anxious to go into the Chinese food business. Co-star Chuck Norris plays bad guy Colt, a martial arts expert who has been brought to Rome to defeat Tang Lung. The highlight of the film is when Norris and Lee square off in the Colosseum. Written and directed by Lee himself. The Bruce Lee Master Collection (from which this movie was viewed) contains five discs: the documentary, “Bruce Lee The Legend” and his four films: The Chinese Connection (which was originally released as Fist Of Fury), which is not to be confused with Fists Of Fury (originally entitled The Big Boss, but - stay with me - occasionally The Chinese Connection has been incorrectly distributed as The Big Boss), Return Of The Dragon and Game Of Death. Incidentally, “Bruce Lee The Legend” is a well-done 88 minute documentary that chronicles the life and career of a man who will live on in the hearts of martial arts movie fans forever.

DVD Picture:
Images on this 2.20:1 disc are generally wanting in sharpness, appearing out-of-focus on anything but close-up shots and lacking fine detail. Hues appear dated and lack full saturation, and brightness flickers within scenes. Large artifacts are apparent throughout. Compression pixelization is minor, but aliasing problems are also evident. Contrast and shadow delineation are poorly rendered, and as well, damage from the source material such as print scratches and artifacts are apparent. Edge enhancement is especially irritating on this title.

Soundtrack:
The Dolby® Digital 2.0 soundtrack is encoded in dual-channel big fat mono. When Dolby ProLogic®-decoded, the mono is properly placed in the center channel. The soundtrack is of poor quality, so much so that you probably would not be able to differentiate the sound characteristics of this film from one made in the 1950s. Distortion is prevalent throughout, and dialogue intelligibility is compromised. The dubbed English language dialogue, on this disc, sounds muffled.